Rana Niejta

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Rana Niejta (alternative names: Rana Niejte, Rana Neida, Rana Nieda, Rana Neide, Ruona Neida, Radien-neide and Blende) is a goddess in sami mythology.

Rana Niejta is the goddess for spring and fertility. The literal translation of the name Rana is «the green» or «the green, fertile fields». The name Rana Niejta can freely be translated as «the daughter of earth». According to Sami mythology, she made the mountains turned southwards green, so that the hungry reindeers had enough food.

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[edit] Sala Niejta and Rana Niejta

The Finnish linguist Otto Donner described in his translation of sami poems into german and Finnish in 1876, how Sala Niejta (the daughter of the Sun), Rana Niejta and Saivo Niejta (the daughter of underworld) often were mentioned together in sami poetry, and sometimes were confused with each other by outsiders without personal knowledge of sami mythology:

The daughter of the Sun is also mention together with saivo neida, the daughter of the underworld, or rāna, ruona neida, the green, that is, the daughter of spring. (Die Sonnentochter wird auch zuweilen saivo neida die tochter der underwelt, oder rāna, ruona neida die grünliche, d.i. die frühlingstochter, welche die berge grün bekleidet, gennant).[1]

However, older sources from 1700 clearly shows that they are three different goddesses. Sala Niejta had the power to make an end on the snow and the cold, while Rana Niejta made it possible for threes and herbs to grow and flourish anew every year. [2] Rana Niejta thus represents the recreation of the spring.

The Samis considered the Sun as

a divine being; but the effects and the heat, which they are sensing from the Sun, they say is the daughter of the Sun, which they call Salaneide, and they consider her to at have the power to make an end to snow and coldness". [3]

Sala Niejta and Rana Niejta were two different goddesses, which, together with

Servge-edni ... are worshipped and adored ... as Goddesses, and when the Sami need them, they are sacrifing to them, so that they shall be mild and give grass to the reindeers of the Sami people, and so that the Sami people should not suffer from hunger, but enjoy milk and cheese from the animals. [4]

To the Summer belongs: that the snow must go away, and thereafter that grass and leaves grows. Both are necessary for the sami people for the sake of their animals, especially in such a polar clima, and in the mountains, where snow and cold rules so much longer, and in some years even more and longer than in others... And as such they could see and sense, how the Sun works so that the snow disappear; but they could not understand how leaves and grass blossoms. They realized that they then had to deal with the power of Radiens − that is the good God, who rules above everything, and that from there leaves and grass came. But the elimination of the snow they credit the warmth from the Sun. [5]

[edit] The place of Rana Niejta in Sami mythology

Among the Swedish samis, Rana Niejta was considered as the daughter of the highest god Radien-attje and his wife Radien-akka.

On the southern sami drums, Radien-attje is most often placed on the uppermost part, with Radien-akka and the son Radien-pardne on each of his sides. Some Swedish sami drums also shows Rana Niejta as the daughter of the highest god.

Sami shamans sometimes turned a spin wheel covered with blod towards her altar as an act of sacrifice for an early spring. Some students of religion also have identified Rana Niejta as the sami counterpart of the goddess Freyja in norse mythology.

[edit] The municipality of Rana, Norway

Some also consider her name as the origin of the name of the municipality of Rana in Norway.

In 1971, a bronze statue depicting Rana-Niejta was raised in the park beneath the shopping centre LA Meyer in Mo i Rana. The statue was made by the artist Arne Durban, and financed by Den Norske Bank (DNB, «The Norwegian Bank») in 1970 in connection with its 25-years anniversary. It was delivered to Rana municipality on November 19, 1970. In 2003, a similar statue was moved from DNB to Nordlandsbanken («Bank of Nordland») in Rana after the process of amalgating the two banks.

Bronze statue showing Rana Niejta in Mo i Rana
Bronze statue showing Rana Niejta in Mo i Rana
Bronze statue showing Rana Niejta in Mo i Rana
Bronze statue showing Rana Niejta in Mo i Rana

[edit] References

  1. ^ [Donner, 1876], p. 13
  2. ^ [Sckanke NS-2], p. 210
  3. ^ [Sckanke NS-2], p. 210
  4. ^ [Sckanke NS-2], p. 210
  5. ^ [Sckanke NS-2], p. 210

[edit] Litterature

  • [Sckanke NS-2] Hans Sckanke: Epitomes Historiae Missionis Lapponica. Pars Prima. Anlagende de Norske Lappers Hedendom og Superstitioner, utgitt av Martha Brock Utne og O. Solberg i Finnmark omkring 1700. Aktstykker og oversikter, Nordnorske Samlinger, Etnografisk museum, Universitet i Oslo, A.W. Brøggers boktrykkeri, 1938, bind 2, pp. 175-256
  • [Donner, 1876] Otto Donner: Lieder der Lappen − Lappalaisia lauluja, Suomi-kirjan Toinen Jakso, II Osa, Helsinki, 1876
  • Bo Lundmark: Bæi'vi mánno nástit (Ume Sami) = Sol- och månkult samt astrala och celesta föreställninga bland samerna (Swedish), Acta bothniensia occidentalis, Skrifter i västerbottnisk kulturhistoria, Umeå, Västterbottens museum, 1982